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EricBess
Guest
Personally, I don't think they go far enough. Thanks to the lenders, flippers, speculators, etc, there is now a huge burden on homeowners.Mooseman said:I did read an article about that and he said a lot of things I feel are correct...... Something like, "If you were trying to make money on realestate and are having problems, the government is not bailing you out.... lenders, flippers, speculators are all on your own...... that's the way the market works.... you took the risk, now pay the price........ if you bought to much house for what you can afford, then the government will help you, but just enough to get out from under it and into something you can afford and if you lose equity .... tough toilet paper...."
My personal frustration isn't buying more house than you can afford, it's getting stuck without options because you can't afford to move. And why? Because of the damage done by all of those people.
I'm actually doing okay, but if I had moved to California a year later, I would be in serious trouble. However, I purchased my house for what was considered reasonable at the time. I couldn't afford a house near the coast, so I intentionally went inland because I didn't want to buy more house than I could afford. I can afford my house payments, but I now owe more on my house than I currently owe (and no, I didn't pull out equity loans like a lot of people). So, I'm doing fine, but if my situation were to change and I needed to move, I would be in a lot of trouble.
I blame those same people, so I certainly hope the government isn't going to use my tax dollars to help them out. I can't get any assistance, so why should I pay for them to? Personally, I have very little sympathy for people who bought more than they could afford as well. They knew that the interest rates would be going up and they didn't plan ahead. I realize that some had a change in income status or just flat lost their jobs and I have no problem helping them out, but if they got hit just by the raising interest rates...
I guess you ultimately can't blame anyone but yourself. Had I even considered that housing prices were going to fall this hard, I would have been renting for the past 5 years. But then again, 5 years ago, general consensus was that if you could afford to buy, you were throwing money away by renting.
The greed that led to the current housing situation hurts a lot of innocent people in a lot of subtle and significant ways and I personally wouldn't mind seeing fines and/or jail time for the con artists who got everyone into this mess (not just the people who were conned).